So, here’s the edge of summer’s moment, cutting deep
Into protracted memories like sharpened blades of grass
You’d again taken for granted, cow-spittle-glazed,
And cutting open the crickets’ measured elegy—
Their legworks’ liquid notes evaporate all sound
As land’s early greening cancels its stamp with tilled brown.
April rain’s watermark soils with just such a rich brown
The commemoratives of spring: distant, distinct, deep
In mind, what mind would pack up in excelsior grass,
As fragile as ceramic, yet hard and glazed
As the coulter writing the farmer’s daily elegy.
(His tractor’s buzzing growl plows through afternoon’s sound
To perforate its borders.) All totaled, summers sound
The sigh of sunlit bolts tossed into barn-shadow’s brown.
Between the light and dark, a country road runs deep
Beyond the quilted blanket-thought that flesh is grass.
The practiced route of hours leaves your dusty eyes tear-glazed.
Your tires eat away at gravel’s hard elegy
Like a sewing machine’s chattering elegy
Appalled at its own sound. Time posts summer’s ripe sound
Until in autumn’s dead-lettered land of grey and brown
It drags the apple bough down, down… and pierces deep
The childhood that furs its small feet with shredded chits of grass
And waits for autumn by a rural mailbox glazed
With morning hours. For here’s a friendly farewell glazed
With the come-and-go of solstitial elegy.
As crickets compose life’s counterintuitive sound—
Even so, your mind addresses in a study of brown
The events of June, July, August…. Remember: deep
As sleep was, new as birth is, lasting as the grass
Will be, so you go. The sad scent of mown grass,
Envelops you as you roll the window down, dew-glazed
As your eyes are shaped to fit the slot of an elegy
To yesterday. The darkness delivers its sound
In letters, spurs, flats and sharps—the unlatched dawn is brown
And yawns with reminiscent light to hint from its deep
Box the correspondence of time—postscripts in the grass—
Reversed, glazed with memory’s gum, an elegy
Delivered without a sound—weighed, stamped, wrapped in brown.
Joseph O'Brien
Joseph O’Brien is the poetry editor for the San Diego Reader.
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